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Illinois lawmakers likely to approve same-sex marriage next week

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Volpe also told of how her son was once hospitalized, and hospital officials barred her from the room because only parents were allowed, and Santos was already there. They wouldn’t accept Volpe’s explanation that they were both the child’s mother.

Had she been able to say they were married, she said, she believes such episodes would be easier to navigate.

“Civil unions are not enough,” said Volpe.

Opponents who testified against the bill Thursday focused on what they said would be the damaging effects to the concept of marriage. Bishop Thomas John Paprocki of the Catholic Diocese of Springfield warned that the measure promotes the idea that “the main purpose of marriage is adult satisfaction, unrelated to the pro-creation of children.”

“We do not believe that marriage should be redefined in this way,” said Paprocki.

The General Assembly is in lame-duck session, meaning some members will leave office when the new legislature is seated on Wednesday. Proponents are trying to get the act passed before the current session expires, with support of some lawmakers whose careers are almost over.

Opponents have been highly critical of the decision to push the bill during the lame-duck session, which is how the state’s civil-union bill was passed in 2010.

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